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Hestia Homeschool for Young Wild Women

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Saturday, September 25, 2004
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September 2004
We're going Camping!
Note from Evonne
Sunwatch Village
Homeschoolers for Bush
Tabitha and a friend at our Girl Scout Overnight
Pictures of us from Tall Stacks Riverboat Festival
Mandy and Hannah Picture
Ice Age Unit study
Sex Ed:  Sex Toys
Just About Fish Tour and Craft
Bereaved Mother questioned by Federal Agents
Daily Buzzword :  Hubbub
cat diary
Marketing Christianity Index
loving thought about God
Saturday Six
Cincinnati Art Museum tours
What mystical creature are you?
Iraq
Notebooking
Yom Kippur confession
Mandy and Red Finger Nail Polish "Blood"
web ring reject
Vulva of the Day:  Stuffed Tampon Dolls
Marketing Christianity:  Boy Scout Jesus
Can you read this? I could..(Thanks Pam)
wedding prayer
Marketing Christianity: movie parodies
Drunk Driving does not apply to horses
Characteristics of a psychopath/serial killer
Marketing Jesus:  The 12 gnome apostles?
Egg in a Bottle experiment
Update from Rachel's journal
The Village
The Doe Boy
The Donner Party by Ric Burns
Copying pictures from email??? from a disc??
Jeffery Dahmer Action Figures
Naked Yoga
rescued mousie
Cincinnati Ballet &  behind the scenes tour
mobile phone that detects bad breath
Lord of the Rings Party
Hildalgo
FlyLady More Time for Moms Calendar
Altered Book Club tomorrow
Cinderella's pinkies
death of a giant Grandfather tree
careers vs. family
"real School"
Sweet note from Suellen
Homeschoolers and Bush
Introduction to Hestia Homeschool
What is your inner color?
Halloween garland
Ahimsa
horse slaughter
The Illusion of life  Marionette show
Vulva of the day
Gerbils, Gerbils, Gerbils
bin Somebody
Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra Young People's concerts
20,000
Homeschool Girl Scout schedule for the year
Wild Horses of Mongolia Race Game
Joseph Campbell
Meanwhile, Back at the Gerbil Ranch
Cincinnati Museum Center/Omnimax
squirrel name generator
Our Laird needs your prayers
Chimps: The Dark Side (National Geographic)
Hallmark Hall of Fame:  The Runaway
International Talk Like a Pirate Day
Cheese Day oompah song
Peter Pan Ballet
homeschooling heaven
suicidal Steven
Blank books
grieving the war
Elephant Day
Birding club
Salsa Dancing at the York Street Cafe
American Kennel Club dog posters
Birds of a Feather video
Best Educational Websites
Dick Cheney's DUI
guilt free mocha slush
Raptor, Inc.
one more aikido picture
What kind of freaky mother are you?
aikido pictures
Rachael's visit
Prayer to heal the pain of infertility
Shiitake Mushroom Workshop
Creek Critters Program
Stuff
The puppet show
Olympic moments (thanks Pam!)
What I can do to help my little corner of the world
helping the world
training in Aikido
Other bits n'pieces
9-11 video reviews
meeting Violence with violence: surviving rape
September 11
homeschooling introduction
Mandy's Horse Question of the Day
text-stalking
Frisch Marionette Company
Quiz: are you a Passion Christian?
Repeated Strip Searches of Teen girls
Beautiful early morning sky
Camp Kern
From Rachael's Journal
Graeme base  The Water Hole
documentation
Johnny Appleseed Song
Forgiveness
Vulva of the day: Creating Pubic Art article
DRAFT DEBATE on a Kentuckyhomeschool list
Vulva Art:  Petals
Sexual Guru in three minutes
Dog Lovers will like these (from Kitty)
Fun Quiz
Japan's success due to pubic hair
Our Grief is not a Cry for War
Viva La Vulva
Hated Birthday Presents
Riverfest
Cyborg name generator
Daddy is a GOOD GIRL
quiet day...review of The Passion
Spider hunting
INTERNET resource:  chart jungle
Protect National Forests
Pagan Prayer for Protection of the Home & update on Shelly-belly
Shelby's oral surgery
LOCAL  RESOURCE: Astronomy fair
« September 2004 Archive
Saturday, September 25, 2004
8:03:00 PM EDT
Feeling Happy

Notebooking


 

I got this article from a homeschooling newsletter I read. I liked it enough that I wrote the author and asked if I could put it in my journal and also submit it to our homeschool network. My kids keep notebooks, scrapbooks, and now altered books on everything. I had not thought about page protectors, though, so I trotted right out and bought some to stick in the myriad pamplets and handouts we receive.

The girls are obsessed with their altered books...they spend hours and hours on them every day...they carry them with them when they are relaxing or watching television. I am happy they are bringing them such joy, although I have not seen the surface of my dining room table since Tuesday.  I really need to get a craft area cleared out and furnished in the basement. (Not that they would use it. They like to be in the sunlit upstairs!)

I origionally got the idea of having the girls write their own textbooks from the Waldorf theory of education. They are rather rigid in the way they want the children to prepare the books. I let them do whatever they want. I do correct spelling (most of the time).

We bought new binders on sale at the grocery--fancy ones that had been marked down to two dollars! Then I stopped at our dollar store and let them pick out some zip pockets and fancy doodads that appeal particularly to Tabitha. I bought some subject dividers, and anything that doesn't fit neatly into their Titanic book, Ocean book, Serial Killer book, Bird Book, Gerbil Stud record, Books I've read book, World War Two book, dog scrapbook....and some of the others, well, we put it in the binder in a page protector.

Notebooking
Claire Novak


Is there a curriculum that fits every child's learning style, assesses exactly where the children are at, and prepares them for higher education? According to author/speaker Cindy Rushton, the answer is "Yes!" "Notebooks are adaptable to every style of learning," Rushton writes in A Charlotte Mason Primer. "[Everyone] flourishes when studying areas of delight, regardless of their learning style… [and] of all the options available for assessing the child's progress, notebooking can't be beat! Notebooking [also] prepares the child for...study and research that is necessary in the later years of life."


 

Order out of Chaos: Notebooking Explained
Notebooking seems like an organizer's dream-come-true, but it's also popular with students (and parents) who have a hard time keeping track of schoolwork. The method literally enacts the saying "A place for everything and everything in its place." Simple three-ring binders with page protectors are given to the student for each specific area of study. From cooking to chemistry, the possibilities for creativity are endless.

Notebooking is an excellent way to teach students to reference, outline, categorize, and give appropriate credit to sources. It's also known to work with all ages; high schoolers who love researching are in their element, grade school students are attracted by the hands-on approach, and toddlers like keeping pictures in their very own notebooks. As author/speaker Terri Camp writes in her article Ignite the Fire with Notebooks, "One of the biggest benefits to notebooks is [that] the children learn the joy of finding out information and developing a love of learning."

Biblically Inspired & Historically Proven: The Vital Need for Notebooking
Notebooking is nothing new. In fact, references to the method are made in Malachi 3:16, "…a book of remembrance was written before him for them that feared the LORD, and that thought upon his name." In the Old Testament, kings were trained through methods similar to modern notebooking. Deuteronomy 17:18-19 says, "…he shall write him a copy of this law in a book… And it shall be with him, and he shall read therein all the days of his life: that he may learn to fear the LORD his God, to keep all the words of this law and these statutes, to do them."

Throughout history, thousands of people have used notebooking methods to preserve their legacy. A staggering amount of historical information would have been lost without the work of American journalists, both professional and amateur. Authors are famous for keeping their own writing and collecting the prose of others. Robert Lewis Stevenson carried three books – one for reading, one for copies of inspirational material, and one for his original ideas – and Benjamin Franklin's collected sayings and articles eventually became the content of his popular Poor Richard's Almanack.

Explorers Meriwether Lewis and William Clark are remembered for their extensive expedition journals, in which they noted everything from plant specimens to travel details. Their recordings were a goldmine of discovery, introducing Americans to the grizzly bear and a variety of other animals, as well as trees like the Rocky Mountain Maple and flowers like Snow-on-the-Mountain.

The legendary British voyager Captain James Cook authored a detailed log entitled The Endeavor Journal, in which he recorded everything from transactions with natives – "Some of the Natives brought along side in one of their canoes four of the heads of the men they had lately kill'd, both the hairy-scalps and skin of the faces were on: Mr. Banks bought one of the four" – to problems with crew members.

From George Washington's passionate love of farming – "I shall begrudge no reasonable expense that will contribute to the improvement and neatness of my farms, for nothing pleases me better than to see them in good order…" – to Walt Whitman's abrupt but touching entries about soldiers he nursed during the Civil War – "[Soldier in] bed 15 wants an orange, bed 59 wants some liqourice [sic]..." – historic notebooks offer a vivid realism and link to the present that modern technology is hard-pressed to duplicate.

Charlotte Mason's Opinion on Notebooking
Many notebooking experts recommend Charlotte Mason's teaching methods. Her history timelines and art sketchbooks fit in with the ideas presented by the notebooking approach, but her nature notebooks – artist sketchbooks containing pictures of plants and wildlife drawn by the student – are most often imitated by notebookers. "We must assist the child to educate himself on nature's lines," Mason wrote, "…we must take care not to supplant and crowd out nature and her methods with that which we call education…"

According to Teri Brown, author of the book Day Tripping: Your Guide to Educational Family Adventures, nature notebooks left her son with an "insatiable appetite" for science. "We started keeping the nature notebooks when [my son] was about five," she writes. "Several notebooks later I had a full-fledged scientist on my hands… now, as my son prepares himself for a life of biology in the Fish and Wildlife fields, I am thankful for the early science training given to him by nature observation."

Notebooking in Action: The Binder Queen
Cindy Rushton was encouraged to begin notebooking by her husband's grandmother, Alma Lee "Mamaw" Rushton. Mamaw Rushton collected notebooks full of everything from samples of sewing machine stitches to copies of Cindy's first writing endeavors. As Rushton told TOS, "Her habit of keeping notebooks influenced me to begin my life ministry…God was putting something on my heart that needed to be out there and…help other people."

Rushton describes her homeschooling style as "purpose driven," a mixture of delight directed learning and required studies. "It's really a fine line," Rushton told TOS. "With my son Matthew, if I told him to write a poem, he'd have a fit, but if I said 'Let's study poems about history!' he'd go for it. For us, the best notebooks have been delight directed – our children learn so much from them. Everyone needs purpose behind what they do. Deep down inside, we all want to see our work amount to something, and we want a finished product."

Notebooking offers that finished product while preserving records and memories for future generations. It's easily adjustable, fitting each child's learning methods and styles without becoming restrictive. Best of all, it's a solid method with deep historical roots, proving the wisdom found in Jeremiah 6:16a, "…ask for the old paths, where is the good way, and walk therein, and ye shall find rest for your souls."

Copyright, 2004. Used with permission. The Old Schoolhouse Magazine. <AHREF="HTTP: target="_blank" ? www.thehomeschoolmagazine.com>www.TheHomeschoolMagazine.com .



Written by hestiahomeschool Blog about this entry
This entry has 2 comments: (Add your own)
  • #2 Comment from galleryofpoetry 
    6/16/07 6:09 PM Permalink
    Dear Hestia,   Thank you for sharing this in your blog. It was easy for me to find you and I hope you will find me.   Much appreciation in finding a kindred spirit.  many blessings, and Kindest regards,  galleryofpoetry  ..... a sister blogger
  • #1 Comment from jadzia7667 
    9/25/04 9:42 PM Permalink
    I am the Binder Goddess - lol - I have them for everything.  Bills, birthdays, my BoS.  Twenty one years worth of magical stuff simply can't be organized any other way...I've got five categories, plus a miscellaneous one for things I don't have time to categorize yet.